Pocket sprung mattresses have been a staple in the UK for decades, and in 2026 they’re finally getting proper attention in the US market too, usually under the name “pocket coil” hybrid. Instead of one long wire connecting every coil in the mattress the way old-school innerspring beds did, each spring is sewn into its own individual fabric pocket. That single design change is the reason pocket sprung mattresses feel so different underfoot, and it’s why they’ve become one of the most requested mattress types among the sleepers who write into us asking for recommendations.
Our Top Pocket Sprung & Pocket Coil Mattress Picks
Zinus 12 Inch Pocket Spring Hybrid Mattress
- Strong edge support from reinforced coil perimeter
- Noticeably better airflow than all-foam beds
- Ships compressed and expands fast
- Firmer feel takes a week to break in
- Some initial off-gassing smell
Linenspa 10 Inch Latex Hybrid Mattress
- Latex layer resists heat buildup well
- Good bounce for side-to-side sleepers
- Reasonably priced for a latex hybrid
- Latex smell lingers longer than foam
- Medium-firm only, no soft option
Vibe 12 Inch Hybrid Mattress
- Deep pressure relief at shoulders/hips
- Coils prevent the sinking feel of all-foam beds
- Good value for a 12-inch profile
- Too soft for strict stomach sleepers
- Heavier than average, harder to rotate alone
Signature Sleep Contour 8 Inch Encased Coil Mattress
- Very affordable for a coil mattress
- Firm support suits back sleepers
- Compact 8-inch profile fits low bed frames
- Less plush cushioning up top
- Not ideal for heavier sleepers long-term
Olee Sleep 13 Inch Galaxy Hybrid Gel Infused Spring Mattress
- Sturdy coil gauge resists premature sagging
- Gel infusion helps offset foam heat retention
- Tall profile pairs well with platform frames
- Firm feel isn't for everyone
- Bulky and heavy to move solo
Zinus Green Tea 12 Inch Pocket Spring Hybrid Mattress
- Green tea foam infusion helps with odor control
- Springs move independently, minimal transfer
- Medium-firm feel works for most sleep positions
- Break-in period needed before full comfort
- Foam top layer softens a bit faster than the coil core
Classic Brands Mercer 10.5 Inch Pocket Coil Hybrid Mattress
- More traditional bounce than foam-heavy hybrids
- Good airflow, minimal heat retention
- Reinforced edges for sitting on the bed's perimeter
- Less pressure relief than plusher hybrids
- Firmer than the listed medium-firm rating for some testers
What Actually Makes a Mattress “Pocket Sprung”
In a traditional innerspring mattress, the coils are all linked together with a single continuous wire (called Bonnell or continuous coil construction). Press down on one spot and the whole surface reacts, which is why old spring mattresses squeaked, sagged unevenly, and let your partner’s every toss and turn ripple across the bed. Pocket sprung construction fixes that by wrapping each coil in its own fabric sleeve and leaving it unattached to its neighbors. The springs can compress independently, contouring to your body’s actual pressure points instead of your whole torso pressing down a flat wire grid.
Most modern versions we test are technically “pocket coil hybrids” — a base layer of individually wrapped coils topped with a comfort layer of memory foam, latex, or gel-infused foam. That combination is what gives you the springiness and airflow of a coil system with the pressure relief of foam on top, which is exactly why this category has taken off with US shoppers browsing under names like “hybrid mattress” or “pocket coil mattress” rather than the more British “pocket sprung” phrasing.
Who Actually Benefits From a Pocket Sprung Mattress
Couples and Co-Sleepers
Because each coil moves on its own, movement on one side of the bed doesn’t broadcast across the whole surface. If you or your partner gets up during the night, works nights, or just moves a lot in your sleep, this is genuinely one of the bigger practical upgrades over both traditional innerspring and cheap all-foam mattresses.
Hot Sleepers
Coils create air channels through the core of the mattress that foam alone can’t replicate. If you’ve struggled with waking up sweaty on memory foam, a pocket sprung hybrid with a thinner foam comfort layer is one of the more reliable fixes, alongside the beds we cover in our cooling mattresses for hot sleepers guide.
Side and Combo Sleepers
The independent coil movement contours around the shoulder and hip better than a rigid wire grid, while still giving enough push-back that you don’t sink in and get stuck. We go deeper on firmness and positioning specifics in our guide to mattresses for side sleepers.
Who Should Look Elsewhere
Strict stomach sleepers who need a very firm, minimally contouring surface, and shoppers on an extremely tight budget who don’t need the extra coil complexity, may be better served by a simpler all-foam mattress. If budget is the main driver, our mattresses under $300 guide and mattresses under $500 guide both cover solid non-coil options too.
Coil Count and Gauge: What Actually Matters
Marketing loves to throw around big coil count numbers, but coil count alone doesn’t tell you much without knowing the gauge (wire thickness) and the mattress size it’s spread across. A lower gauge number means a thicker, sturdier wire — a 13-gauge coil is noticeably firmer and more durable than an 15-gauge coil of the same design. Heavier sleepers specifically should look for lower gauge numbers and taller coil profiles (around 6-8 inches of actual coil height) rather than chasing the highest coil count on the spec sheet.
Firmness and What the Labels Actually Mean
Pocket sprung hybrids run the full firmness range, but the coil layer itself tends to push the overall feel slightly firmer than an equivalent all-foam mattress at the same marketed firmness level, because the coils resist compression more than foam does at rest. If you’re used to shopping foam mattresses, it’s worth sizing down half a firmness step when trying a pocket sprung hybrid for the first time.
| Mattress Type | Motion Isolation | Airflow/Cooling | Edge Support | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pocket Sprung Hybrid | Good to very good | Very good | Good | Combo/side sleepers, couples, hot sleepers |
| Traditional Innerspring | Poor | Very good | Fair | Budget shoppers, traditional bounce fans |
| All-Foam (Memory Foam) | Excellent | Poor to fair | Fair to poor | Solo sleepers, pressure relief priority |
| Latex Hybrid | Good | Good | Good | Hot sleepers wanting responsive bounce |
Setting It Up Right
Pocket sprung hybrids generally need firmer support underneath than a pure foam mattress — a slatted platform frame with slats no more than 3 inches apart, or a solid foundation, keeps the coil layer supported evenly and prevents premature sagging between slats. If you’re shopping for a frame at the same time, our platform bed frames guide covers options that pair well with coil-based mattresses, and our bed sizes and dimensions guide is worth checking before you order if you’re between sizes.
How We Approach Mattress Testing
We evaluate pocket sprung and hybrid mattresses on real-world factors: how they feel after a full night’s sleep across different positions, how much motion transfers to a partner, how they sleep temperature-wise over a week, and how the edges hold up when you sit on the perimeter to put on shoes. You can read more about our process on our how we test page, and browse the full range of options on our main mattresses hub.
Related buying guides
- Best Cooling Mattresses for Hot Sleepers
- Best Mattresses for Side Sleepers
- Best Mattresses Under $300
- Best Mattresses Under $500
- Best Platform Bed Frames
- Bed Sizes and Dimensions Guide
- How We Test Mattresses and Beds
Ready to try a pocket sprung mattress?
Our top pick blends coil support with foam comfort at a fair price.
Check price on AmazonIs a pocket sprung mattress the same as a pocket coil mattress?
Yes, they’re the same construction. “Pocket sprung” is the more common British term, while US retailers almost always list the same design as “pocket coil” or “individually wrapped coil.”
How long do pocket sprung mattresses last compared to all-foam mattresses?
Well-built pocket coil hybrids typically hold up for 7-8 years with normal use, similar to or slightly longer than mid-range all-foam mattresses, since the coil core resists the permanent body-impression sagging foam can develop over time.
Are pocket sprung mattresses good for people with back pain?
Many back pain sufferers do well on medium-firm pocket sprung hybrids because the coils give firm, even support while the top foam layer relieves pressure at the shoulders and hips, but very soft options can undermine spinal alignment if you sleep on your stomach.
Do pocket sprung mattresses sleep hot?
Generally no. The open structure around each wrapped coil allows more airflow through the mattress core than all-foam construction, which is one of the main reasons hot sleepers gravitate toward this style.
What coil count should I look for?
Coil count matters less than coil gauge and height. For a queen mattress, look for at least 800-1,000 coils along with a stated gauge of 13-15, rather than judging quality on coil count alone.
Can I use a pocket sprung mattress on a slatted bed frame?
Yes, as long as the slats are spaced no more than about 3 inches apart. Wider gaps can let the coil layer sag or dip unevenly over time, so check your frame’s slat spacing before ordering.
Do pocket sprung mattresses need a box spring?
Most modern pocket coil hybrids are designed for platform beds or adjustable bases and don’t require a traditional box spring, though checking the manufacturer’s warranty terms is worth doing since some brands do require a compatible foundation to keep the warranty valid.
Are pocket sprung mattresses good for heavier sleepers?
Yes, provided you choose a model with a taller coil section and lower gauge (thicker) wire, since these hold support longer under higher body weight than thinner coil hybrids designed for average body weights.